Word: forgets
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Dates: during 1930-1939
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Though it has apparently not been seen on the stage since 1870, it was a great success when first produced in 1696, and continued so during the 18th century. Vanbrugh wrote it, he remarked, to divert the wits of the town "and make them forget their spleen in spite of their wives and taxes...
Everyone knows that those boys, when the bugle blew, were over there prepared to give their all, quo quidem, opere quid potest esse praeclarius? The state police seem to forget the fact that the possession of a uniform in 1918 gives a man a privilege, well not to be too frank, to sort of disregard the laws and not to work too hard on P.W.A. They seem to forget that our boys went through hell, hell, mind you, and also the streets of Paris and the Follies Bergere...
...anything in connection with the tax return of this petitioner for 1931 that has anything to do with whether a bank in which he had no interest did or did not receive money from him in 1933, I respectfully submit you will have to indulge in mental gymnastics or forget all the laws of evidence." Objection sustained...
Ever a provoking law unto himself, Genius Einstein switched over to the theme that most Jews in Germany "during the past 20 years . . . slavishly copied the still foreign-to-them modes of the life of the German people with the sole purpose of making themselves forget their Jewish origin...
...gradation of courses was suggested as a cure for the alleged ills of this branch of the English department. The editor seems to forget a few points. 1. In gaining admission to English 22 and English A-2 (which courses would probably be called the "first" step) the selection would still rest with the instructor; obviously only a part of those applying would have been measured by the English A-1 yardstick. (2) In the three "higher" courses, 12, 31, and 5, the applicant is likely to find a gradation rule a boomerang. As it is now, the instructors...